US8849326B2 - Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission - Google Patents
Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission Download PDFInfo
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- US8849326B2 US8849326B2 US13/491,204 US201213491204A US8849326B2 US 8849326 B2 US8849326 B2 US 8849326B2 US 201213491204 A US201213491204 A US 201213491204A US 8849326 B2 US8849326 B2 US 8849326B2
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L1/00—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
- H04L1/0001—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04J—MULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
- H04J11/00—Orthogonal multiplex systems, e.g. using WALSH codes
- H04J11/0023—Interference mitigation or co-ordination
- H04J11/005—Interference mitigation or co-ordination of intercell interference
- H04J11/0053—Interference mitigation or co-ordination of intercell interference using co-ordinated multipoint transmission/reception
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L1/00—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
- H04L1/0001—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff
- H04L1/0015—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff characterised by the adaptation strategy
- H04L1/0022—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff characterised by the adaptation strategy in which mode-switching is influenced by the user
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L1/00—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
- H04L1/0001—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff
- H04L1/0033—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff arrangements specific to the transmitter
- H04L1/0034—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff arrangements specific to the transmitter where the transmitter decides based on inferences, e.g. use of implicit signalling
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L1/00—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
- H04L1/02—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by diversity reception
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- H04L1/022—
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L5/00—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
- H04L5/003—Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
- H04L5/0032—Distributed allocation, i.e. involving a plurality of allocating devices, each making partial allocation
- H04L5/0035—Resource allocation in a cooperative multipoint environment
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L5/00—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
- H04L5/003—Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
- H04L5/0058—Allocation criteria
- H04L5/006—Quality of the received signal, e.g. BER, SNR, water filling
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L5/00—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
- H04L5/003—Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
- H04L5/0058—Allocation criteria
- H04L5/0073—Allocation arrangements that take into account other cell interferences
Definitions
- the present invention relates generally to wireless communication networks, and in particular to a network-centric system and method of downlink link adaptation for Coordinated Multi-Point (CoMP) cells.
- CoMP Coordinated Multi-Point
- the SINR(k;t) experienced by a UE depends on the desired signal transmitted to the UE, interference from transmissions to other UEs in the same sub-cell, interference from transmissions to other UEs in other sub-cells, and thermal noise.
- Conventional link adaptation can be described as UE-centric, in that each UE periodically measures SINR(k;t), and these measurements are reported to the network—with a delay of several Transmission Time Intervals (TTI)—on the uplink, e.g., in Channel Quality Information (CQI) reports.
- TTI Transmission Time Intervals
- CQI Channel Quality Information
- a network-centric link adaptation process is performed by each CoMP cell controller.
- the CoMP cell controller receives at least infrequent channel estimates from a UE in the CoMP cell, from which it estimates downlink channel quality and thermal noise at the UE.
- the CoMP cell controller is aware of the desired signal to be received at the UE, and the intra-CoMP cell interference to the UE caused by transmissions to other UEs in the CoMP cell.
- the CoMP cell receives from the UE reports of inter-CoMP cell interference caused by transmissions by other CoMP cells.
- FIG. 1 is a functional block diagram of a Coordinated Multi-Point (CoMP) cell in a wireless communication network.
- CoMP Coordinated Multi-Point
- FIG. 2 is a functional block diagram of a plurality of CoMP cells in a wireless communication network.
- LTE typically only one user is scheduled on each RB in each cell; hence, own-cell interference is typically zero in LTE. This implies that in LTE, the dominant source of errors in predicting SINR is the fast varying other-cell interference.
- CoMP Coordinated multipoint
- a plurality of geographically contiguous cells referred to as sub-cells—are grouped together to form a CoMP cell.
- Each CoMP cell has a central controller that coordinates transmission within its constituent sub-cells so as to maintain inter-cell interference within the CoMP cell (referred to herein as intra-CoMP cell interference) below a predetermined amount.
- the CoMP cell controller coordinates scheduling of transmissions to and from user equipment (UE) within the cells, and/or actively suppresses interference using signal processing techniques.
- UE user equipment
- CoMP cell and “sub-cell” is used herein, more current CoMP terminology refers to a CoMP cell as a “CoMP cooperating set” or a “CoMP cluster”, while a constituent cell is simply referred to as a “cell” rather than a “sub-cell”. This change in terminology does not impact the CoMP functionality described herein.
- CoMP technology as described in the previous paragraph includes a plurality of sub-cells.
- a CoMP cell may comprise a plurality of geographically contiguous cells with base stations located at different sites, often referred to as “inter-site” CoMP technology.
- a CoMP cell may include a plurality of geographically contiguous cells (or sectors) with base stations located at a common site, often referred to as “intra-site” CoMP technology.
- a site in a cellular system may be divided into three sectors, each covering 120 degrees, with three logically separated base stations.
- a CoMP cell consists of a single cell with a single base station. Accordingly, the following description, and FIGS. 1-4 , shall be construed to encompass any CoMP technology that includes a plurality of sub-cells or a CoMP cell that consists of a single sub-cell with a single base station.
- FIG. 1 depicts a Coordinated Multi-point (CoMP) cell 12 comprising, in this example, seven conventional cells, referred to herein as sub-cells 14 .
- Each sub-cell 14 includes a network transceiver 16 (also known as a base station, NodeB, Access Point, or the like) providing wireless communications to subscribers within the sub-cell 14 , including mobile UEs 18 .
- a CoMP cell controller 20 (also known as Evolved NodeB or eNodeB) coordinates transmissions to UEs 18 within the CoMP cell to maximize data rates to selected UEs, while maintaining intra-CoMP cell interference below a predetermined level.
- the CoMP cell controller 20 may accomplish this through scheduling, and/or by combining weighted transmissions from two or more network transceivers 16 to any UE 18 .
- FIG. 2 depicts a wireless communication network 10 comprising a plurality of CoMP cells 12 , 22 , 24 , each of which comprises a plurality of sub-cells 14 .
- the CoMP cell controller 20 is effective in mitigating intra-CoMP cell interference within a single CoMP cell 12 , it generally has no knowledge of transmissions scheduled in neighboring CoMP cells 22 , 24 . Accordingly, the CoMP cell controller 20 lacks information from which to estimate interference from other CoMP cells, or inter-Comp cell interference.
- the same deficiency described above regarding TDMA scheduling, and variations between own-cell interference and other-cell interference from one TTI to the next, also apply to intra-CoMP interference and intra-CoMP interference, respectively, as transmissions between different CoMP cells are not coordinated.
- FIGS. 1 and 2 also encompass CoMP cells 12 , one or more of which consists of a single sub-cell 14 .
- the controller 20 in each CoMP cell 12 already has enough information to accurately predict most of the signals that contribute to SINR(k;t+d) during a given TTI. From the downlink channel state information to the UEs 18 served by a CoMP cell 12 , the CoMP cell controller 20 can easily predict the desired signal to be observed by each UE 18 and the intra-CoMP cell interference to be observed by each UE 18 . Furthermore, an estimate of the thermal noise and average inter-CoMP cell interference observed by each UE 18 can be reported back by the UE to the CoMP cell controller 20 . This enables the CoMP cell controller 20 to perform accurate network-centric link adaptation. Such network-centric link adaptation not only improves downlink performance over conventional UE-centric link adaptation, it additionally reduces channel reporting by the UEs 18 on the uplink.
- CSI Channel State Information
- UE 0 For a first UE 18 , denoted UE 0 , served by a first CoMP cell 12 , denoted CoMP cell zero. Assuming the UE has a single receive antenna, the signal received by UE 0 can be expressed as
- H 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) H 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ x 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) + ⁇ l ⁇ S 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ H 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ x l ⁇ ( k ; t ) + I oth ⁇ ( k ; t ) + W 0 ⁇ ( k ; t )
- H 0 (k;t) is the channel between the transmit antennas of the network transceivers 16 in CoMP cell zero and the antenna(s) of UE 0 ;
- x i (k;t) is the signal transmitted from the transmit antennas of the network transceivers 16 in cell zero to the i th UE served by cell zero, with variance ⁇ i 2 (k;t);
- S 0 (k;t) is the set of UEs that are served simultaneously with UE
- SINR(k;t) observed by UE 0 at sub-carrier “k: and time “t” can then be expressed as
- SINR ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ H 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ 2 ⁇ ⁇ 0 2 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ H 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ 2 ⁇ ⁇ l ⁇ S 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ⁇ ⁇ l 2 ⁇ ( k ; t ) + ⁇ oth 2 ⁇ ( k ; t ) + N 0 ⁇ ( k ; t ) ( 1 )
- the CoMP controller 20 is aware of all downlink channels to all the UEs 18 served by the CoMP cell 12 .
- the CoMP cell controller 20 can thus estimate various quantities in equation (1) with greater precision than relying on measurements and reports from the UEs 18 , with their concomitant delays.
- the CoMP cell controller 20 is aware of (or at least estimates) the downlink channel quality to the UEs 18 that it serves, thus the quantity H 0 (k;t) is known.
- the CoMP cell controller 20 is also aware of the other UEs 18 in its own CoMP cell, thus the quantity S 0 (k;t) is known, as is ⁇ i 2 (k;t).
- the variance of the thermal noise at each UE 18 is constant over time and frequency; thus, it can be safely assumed that the CoMP cell controller 20 can easily acquire or estimate N 0 (k;t).
- the only part of the equation (1) that is not known to the CoMP cell controller 20 is the interference seen by UE 0 due to the transmissions by other CoMP cells 22 , 24 . Given that different CoMP cells 12 , 22 , 24 act independently, there is no way that any one CoMP cell 12 , 22 , 24 can acquire this information. As discussed before, this inter-CoMP cells interference can change quite rapidly.
- each UE 18 computes the average of the power of inter-CoMP cell interference over all sub-carriers, and reports to its serving CoMP cell controller 20 just one frequency-independent average value for the power of inter-CoMP cell interference.
- a mechanism for UEs 18 to report to the network their observed average power (averaged over sub-carriers and time) of the inter-CoMP cell interference may be defined by extensions to the relevant network protocol. The network protocol extensions may also define how often such reports should be sent by each UE 18 to its serving CoMP cell controller 20 . Since this reported quantity is frequency-independent, the amount of feedback required to implement the network-centric link adaptation is significantly less than the amount of feedback needed to implement conventional, UE-centric link adaptation. In some embodiments, a practical implementation may direct the UEs 18 to report the sum of intra-CoMP cell interference and thermal noise.
- FIG. 3 depicts a method 100 of performing network-centric link adaptation for a first UE 18 , performed by a controller 20 of a first CoMP cell 12 comprising a plurality of network transceivers 16 , each serving UEs 18 in respective sub-cells.
- the method 100 repeats at predetermined durations over which link adaptation is performed, for example, once per TTI.
- the CoMP cell controller 20 determines the downlink channel between one or more network transmitters 16 in the first CoMP cell 20 scheduled to transmit to the first UE 18 , and receive antenna(s) of the first UE 18 (block 102 ). This may result from Channel State Information (CSI) or similar reports by the UE 18 , based on reference, or pilot, symbols transmitted by the relevant network transmitters 16 .
- CSI Channel State Information
- the CoMP cell controller 20 determines the desired signal to be received at the first UE 18 (block 104 ), such as for example an appropriately modulated and coded data packet received by the network 12 .
- the CoMP cell controller 20 also determines the interference caused to the first UE 18 by transmissions to other UEs 18 in the first CoMP cell 12 (block 106 ).
- the CoMP cell controller 20 utilizes sophisticated signal processing algorithms to weight transmissions from different network transmitters 16 so as to maximize the data rate to selected UEs 18 , while simultaneously minimizing the interference presented to other UEs 18 . Accordingly, the CoMP cell controller 20 is uniquely aware of the interference presented to any given UE 18 resulting from intra-CoMP cell interference.
- the CoMP cell controller 20 further determines the thermal noise observed at the first UE 18 (block 108 ). Since the variance of the thermal noise at each UE 18 is constant over time and frequency, the thermal noise may be accurately estimated based on relatively infrequent reports from the UEs 18 . Furthermore, the UEs 18 may average thermal noise measurements over frequency, reducing the number of reports required, and hence conserving uplink bandwidth.
- the CoMP cell controller 20 receives from the first UE 18 a measure of interference from one or more other CoMP cells 22 , 24 (block 110 ).
- the UE 18 measurement of total inter-CoMP cell interference is facilitated by the CoMP cell controller 20 transmitting no symbols from any of its network transceivers 16 during a certain known interval. During such an interval, all signals received by the UE 18 are from other CoMP cells 22 , 24 .
- the UE 18 averages the inter-CoMP cell interference over sub-carriers, and hence its uplink reporting is significantly reduced compared to conventional, UE-centric methods of link adaptation.
- the CoMP cell controller 20 Based on the downlink channel quality, the desired signal, the intra-CoMP cell interference, the inter-CoMP cell interference, and the thermal noise, the CoMP cell controller 20 performs link adaptation for the first UE 18 by determining the modulation and coding, and other transmission parameters, to be applied to CoMP cell 12 transmissions to the first UE 18 during the next predetermined transmission duration, e.g., TTI (block 112 ). The method 100 then repeats for the next predetermined transmission duration (although not all steps, e.g., block 108 , will necessarily be performed anew at each iteration).
- TTI next predetermined transmission duration
- FIG. 4 graphs the results of system-level simulations performed to compare the performance of conventional, UE-centric link adaptation to the performance of the inventive, network-centric link adaptation disclosed herein.
- the simulation environment comprised downlink transmissions in a CoMP system with seven sub-cells, each comprising three sectors—that is, 21 separately controllable network transceivers 16 per CoMP cell 12 .
- the distance between sites of network transceivers 16 in the simulations was 500 meters.
- Each network transceiver 16 has four transmit antennas, and each UE 18 has two receive antennas.
- the simulations computed the overall spectral efficiency and cell-edge bit rate for two different link adaptation approaches—UE-centric and network-centric.
- the network-centric link adaptation results in approximately 50% higher spectral efficiency (throughput, measured in bits per second per Hz per cell) than the UE-centric link adaptation.
- the network-centric link adaptation results in 90% higher achievable cell-edge bit rate than the UE-centric link adaptation (most inter-CoMP cell interference occur in sub-cells at the CoMP cell edges).
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Abstract
Description
SINR(t)=[SINR(k1;t)SINR(k2;t) . . . SINR(K;t)],
where SINR(k;t) is the SINR at sub-carrier “k” (k=k1, k2, . . . , K) at time “t.”
where
H0(k;t) is the channel between the transmit antennas of the
xi(k;t) is the signal transmitted from the transmit antennas of the
S0(k;t) is the set of UEs that are served simultaneously with UE0 by cell zero;
Ioth (k; t) is inter-CoMP cell interference (that is, interference from CoMP cells other than CoMP cell zero) observed by UE0, with variance σoth 2(k;t); and
W0(k;t) is thermal noise received, with variance N0(k;t).
In a
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US13/491,204 US8849326B2 (en) | 2009-06-12 | 2012-06-07 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
TW102117608A TW201351940A (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-05-17 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
EP13742749.8A EP2859672A1 (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
PCT/IB2013/054673 WO2013183029A1 (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
AU2013273112A AU2013273112B2 (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
CN201380030056.5A CN104350697A (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
BR112014029648A BR112014029648A2 (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
IN10419DEN2014 IN2014DN10419A (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | |
JP2015515639A JP6242387B2 (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | Network-centric link adaptation for cooperative multipoint downlink transmission |
KR20157000249A KR20150029681A (en) | 2012-06-07 | 2013-06-06 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
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US12/483,603 US8219128B2 (en) | 2009-06-12 | 2009-06-12 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
US13/491,204 US8849326B2 (en) | 2009-06-12 | 2012-06-07 | Network-centric link adaptation for coordinated multipoint downlink transmission |
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US20170117996A1 (en) * | 2015-10-27 | 2017-04-27 | Telefonica, S.A. | Method to perform joint scheduling in the downlink or in the uplink of a centralized ofdm radio access network for a plurality of users considering time, frequency and space domains, scheduler device thereof and computer program products |
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US9553680B1 (en) * | 2012-04-02 | 2017-01-24 | Sprint Communications Company L.P. | Uplink interference mitigation |
US10039116B1 (en) | 2012-04-02 | 2018-07-31 | Sprint Communications Company L.P. | Long term evolution scheduler to mitigate interference |
US8837320B2 (en) | 2012-07-23 | 2014-09-16 | Apple Inc. | Methods and systems for anchored down-selection in a coordinated multipoint transmission cluster |
FR3001847B1 (en) * | 2013-02-04 | 2015-03-20 | Commissariat Energie Atomique | METHOD OF ADAPTATION OF LIAISON DIRECTED BY A CHOICE OF INTERFERENCE REGIME |
US10560244B2 (en) * | 2013-07-24 | 2020-02-11 | At&T Intellectual Property I, L.P. | System and method for reducing inter-cellsite interference in full-duplex communications |
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Texas Instruments: "Network MIMO Precoding" 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP); Technicalspecification (TS), XX, XX, No. R1-082497, Jul. 4, 2008, pp. 1-4. |
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US20120300754A1 (en) * | 2009-10-29 | 2012-11-29 | Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) | Scheduling of Up-Link Transmissions of a Wireless Communication System |
US9055603B2 (en) * | 2009-10-29 | 2015-06-09 | Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) | Scheduling of up-link transmissions of a wireless communication system |
US20170117996A1 (en) * | 2015-10-27 | 2017-04-27 | Telefonica, S.A. | Method to perform joint scheduling in the downlink or in the uplink of a centralized ofdm radio access network for a plurality of users considering time, frequency and space domains, scheduler device thereof and computer program products |
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